Tampa Bay Rays

BALTIMORE — The Baltimore Orioles had won 109 consecutive games when leading after seven innings — a streak that stretched to the 2011 season. But Tampa Bay ended that run on Saturday View full post on Yahoo! Sports – M...
BALTIMORE — The Baltimore Orioles had won 109 consecutive games when leading after seven innings — a streak that stretched to the 2011 season. But Tampa Bay ended that run on Saturday View full post on Yahoo! Sports – MLB – Tampa Bay Rays News
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score: 1 about 3 hours ago
Piggybacking off what Ian said yesterday in the lede for his recap, this Rays team is so incredibly backwards from what we're used to watching. After the past few season, I've grown accustomed to watching Rays teams that excelled at -- a...
Piggybacking off what Ian said yesterday in the lede for his recap, this Rays team is so incredibly backwards from what we're used to watching. After the past few season, I've grown accustomed to watching Rays teams that excelled at -- as cliche as it is to say -- the fundamentals. They pitched well and played spectacular defense, trusting on their run prevention skills to keep games close enough for their offense to win. Especially last season, when Longoria missed so much of the season, the Rays had to be good at run prevention or else they stood no shot at winning. This year, though? It's been Bizarro Rays Baseball. Sure, we got to gripe about the offense for the first few weeks of the season like normal, but at this point, if anyone claims the Rays have an anemic offense, they're playing fast and loose with the truth. Because holy crap, this is ridiculous: Yup, that's right: coming into today, the Rays had the second best offense in all of baseball. That's crazy talk. After losing B.J. Upton this offseason, nobody expected the Rays offense to be this good right now. But Evan Longoria is on fire, James Loney has rediscovered the ol' Kotchman magic, Kelly Johnson is crushing the ball, and even Luke Scott has been hitting well of late. It's surreal. Yet despite the offense churning on all cylinders, the Rays are still making every game close due to uncharacteristic poor pitching. Take this evening's game for example. Roberto Hernandez had been looking so good coming into tonight's game. His ERA was still in the mid-4s, but he was striking out hitters, keeping the ball on the ground, and providing the Rays with valuable innings by working a full six innings in all but one of his starts. He wasn't fooling anyone tonight, though, as the Orioles jumped all over him in the early innings. Hernandez ended up leaving after not being able to get an out in the third inning, after having allowed eight hits (including two home runs) and five runs. He kept the ball down in the zone, but it seemed like he got too much of the plate with many of them and the Orioles didn't let him escape. The Rays scored four runs on Jair Jurrjens to chase him out of the game after five innings -- three of those runs were driven in by Matt Joyce, on a homer and a double -- but they still trailed 6-4 going into the top of the ninth inning. Jim Johnson has been pretty much automatic for the Orioles over the last few seasons, so the Rays seemed to have squandered another game due to poor pitching. ...And yet, the Rays found a way. Kelly Johnson brought the game to within one run by hitting a solo home run, and then the Rays started a congoline around the basepaths. By the time the full damage was done, the Rays had scored six runs off a total of five hits and four walks. Josh Lueke closed out the game in the bottom of the ninth, and that was that. This offensive explosion most likely will not last. The Rays' offense is firing on all cylinders now, and we've all seen what it can do when things aren't running along optimally. At some point, the offense will cool down and they will have to go back to winning games through pitching and defense...but today was not that day. It'd be great if the Rays could get their pitching to turn things around, but for now, let's just be thankful the Rays have -- for the moment at least -- one of the best offenses in the majors. While I sung the praises of the Rays' offense up above, Alex Torres was one of the main heroes from today. Going into the fifth inning, the game seemed to be on the verge of slipping away from the Rays. They were down 6-4 and Cesar Ramos hadn't been able to contain the Orioles either, so Joe Maddon called in Torres to start the fifth inning. Torres ended up being spectacular; he pitched four shutout innings without allowing a hit or a run, keeping the Rays in the game and in the position to come back in the ninth. Talk about clutch. Matt Joyce was the big offensive star of the game for the Ra
score: 1 about 4 hours ago
Joe is back with his postgame thoughts… What a beautiful comeback by the Rays for a critical win! Man, Joe was getting ready to rag on the Rays pitching for being subpar… again. Joe was getting ready to rag on Jose Molina for...
Joe is back with his postgame thoughts… What a beautiful comeback by the Rays for a critical win! Man, Joe was getting ready to rag on the Rays pitching for being subpar… again. Joe was getting ready to rag on Jose Molina for being a lummox on the basepaths and being so friggin’ overweight he pulls a hamstring on a double that most nursing home residents would be able to stretch into a triple with their walkers. Joe was getting ready to rag on Yunel Escobar for being a waste. Joe was getting ready to drown his sorrows over what appeared to be an ankle injury by Matt Joyce in making an out. But no! Six runs in the ninth — SIX!! — and the Rays reversed an ugly, depressing loss into a win. Sadly, with the pitching being an obstacle this year for the first time in years, this is the kind of game the Rays are going to have to win. They are going to have to have strong offensive outputs to overcome the bad pitching. Thankfully, Merlot Joe decided to leave Jake McGee in the pen, instead letting Josh Lueke close out a beautiful ninth-inning rally for a memorable win. © Joe Rays Fan for Rays Index, 2013. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us Post tags:
score: 1 about 5 hours ago
Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports With starting pitcher David Price getting placed on the 15-day disabled list with a strained triceps, the Tampa Bay Rays must find someone to take his scheduled start on Monday against the Toronto Blue Jays. ...
Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports With starting pitcher David Price getting placed on the 15-day disabled list with a strained triceps, the Tampa Bay Rays must find someone to take his scheduled start on Monday against the Toronto Blue Jays. Left-hander Alex Torres could very well be the guy for the job. The Rays called up Torres on Thursday to take a spot in the bullpen. He recorded one groundball out in that night’s 4-3 loss to the Boston Red Sox. Since he only pitched in 1/3 of an inning there is a good chance he will be the pitcher Tampa Bay will use in the starting rotation early next week. With that being said, there has been no such announcement and there is no guarantee Torres will be the man the Rays go with. There are still several other talented options in the minors that could fill the role, while keeping Torres in the bullpen. However, the 25-year-old is more than capable of handling his own in an expanded role. In seven starts with Triple-A Durham this season, Torres is 2-2 with a 2.39 earned run average and 49 strikeouts in 37 2/3 innings. “We’ve been really pounding on him and talking to him a lot,” manager Joe Maddon said, according to RaysBaseball.com. “This guy’s got great stuff. He’s got strikeout stuff. He’s got strikeout stuff within the strike zone. He’s also got the chase kind of stuff and the ability to pitch in this division against these kinds of hitters. We know that. “You’ve got to keep talking, man. Redundancy and coaching are probably one in the same thing. Eventually, the message hits home. Hopefully it’s hit, because this guy has got great stuff. He’s got good makeup. He’s a tough guy. It’s just a matter of him throwing strikes when he wants to.” Even if Torres does not get to make his first Major League start on Monday, he is happy to do whatever he can to help Tampa Bay win ball games. If that means recording only one out in a single appearance then that is fine by him.
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ROGER MOONEY BALTIMORE The Rays return to the field today for a 4:05 p.m., national TV game on Fox. Roberto Hernandez is on the hill for the Rays. Right-hander Jair Jurrjens will make his Orioles debut. Here are the lineups: RAYS Jenning...
ROGER MOONEY BALTIMORE The Rays return to the field today for a 4:05 p.m., national TV game on Fox. Roberto Hernandez is on the hill for the Rays. Right-hander Jair Jurrjens will make his Orioles debut. Here are the lineups: RAYS Jennings CF Joyce RF Zobrist…
score: 1 about 9 hours ago
Chacin frustrated after he fails to hold six-run lead View full post on Yahoo! Sports – MLB – Tampa Bay Rays News
Chacin frustrated after he fails to hold six-run lead View full post on Yahoo! Sports – MLB – Tampa Bay Rays News
score: 1 about 14 hours ago
Catcher Craig Albernaz made his first 2013 appearance as a pitcher last night. I like Mr. Albernaz and I think he’s actually a decent pitcher, but his presence on the mound speaks to more than just the perception that the game was a lost...
Catcher Craig Albernaz made his first 2013 appearance as a pitcher last night. I like Mr. Albernaz and I think he’s actually a decent pitcher, but his presence on the mound speaks to more than just the perception that the game was a lost cause.Let’s try to track the changes among the Bulls pitching staff. Josh Lueke was called up when when the Rays’ Brandon Gomes went on the DL. He’s had three appearances since getting there and is doing just fine. That same day Bulls reliever Frank De Los Santos went on the disabled list.A few days later the Rays signed reliever Cory Wade to fill one of the holes in the bullpen. He has had two appearances and looks OK, even though he coughed up one of the many, many home runs the Bulls offered up to the Rochester Red Wings.The Bulls were still one pitcher short.Then the Rays called up the Bulls best starting pitcher, Alex Torres, and put him in to throw five pitches to get the last out of a lost game Thursday evening. He was called up because starting pitcher David Price went on the DL. (Does a ? inning relief appearance in replacement for David Price make any sense to you? No? Me, either.)The Rays, apparently offering a AAA “cup of coffee” to Single-A reliever, Austin Hubbard, sent him from the Charlotte Stone Crabs up to Rochester to lend the Bulls a hand. Not so helpful — an awful ? of an inning last night — 5 runs on 4 hits and three walks for a stunning ERA of 67.50.A consequence of this turmoil (I haven’t mentioned Chris Archer’s troubles) is that Jim Paduch keeps getting called on to start games or come in for a long relief session — and Paduch is by far the least effective member of this year’s Bulls staff.And the Bulls are still short a pitcher (remember, no replacement for De Los Santos was ever named). Hence Craig Albernaz on the mound.And even if Torres only stays with the Rays for a few days, he would be out of any rotation for at least a week.The Rays giveth, Cory Wade and Austin Hubbard; the Rays taketh away, Josh Lueke and Alex Torres; some players get broken, Frank De Los Santos, Mike Montgomery.As this picture of ERA trends shows, this ain’t looking good at all.Matching Up The Orioles farm team, the Norfolk Tides have been on quite a ride over the last couple of weeks and are now 4 games ahead of the Bulls in the South Division. Statistically, they are similar teams. Their pitching seems to be improving. Only two games, then the Bulls are out of town so that the ACC can rip up the turf of the DBAP. table.tableizer-table { border: 1px solid #CCC; font-family: ; font-size: 12px; } .tableizer-table td { padding: 4px; margin: 3px; border: 1px solid #ccc; } .tableizer-table th { background-color: #104E8B; color: #FFF; font-weight: bold; } May 18, 2013W-LRSRADiffBAOPSERANorfolk29-1323219537.279.8013.95Durham25-1722317647.275.7513.84
score: 1 about 15 hours ago
Joe is back with his postgame thoughts…. Fernando Rodney moaned about “one pitch” costing the Rays and him in the Sox debacle on Thursday night. So it was fitting that one pitch really turned the Rays to wacky 12-10 wi...
Joe is back with his postgame thoughts…. Fernando Rodney moaned about “one pitch” costing the Rays and him in the Sox debacle on Thursday night. So it was fitting that one pitch really turned the Rays to wacky 12-10 win in Baltimore on Friday. In the third inning, Kelly Johnson looked at an absolutely sure strike-3 with two outs, but the home plate umpire choked in the Rays’ favor and Johnson drilled the next Jason Hammell pitch for a three-run homer. What a beautiful thing. Joe felt like a couple of early-season wrongs were righted there by the baseball gods. So when is the Derek Shelton statue going to be erected? The Rays went 17-for-39 at the plate Friday, plus five walks, and they’re actually a well-above average hitting team at this point. It’s no typo that the Rays are 11th in batting average, fourth in OBP, and eighth in runs scored in MLB. Luke Scott continues to look like a polished hitter — though not on the bases — and even Yunel Escobar has climbed out of Karlos Pena territory. The Rays don’t look like the Rays. Joe can’t figure out if that’s a good thing or not. © Joe Rays Fan for Rays Index, 2013. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us Post tags: Joe Rays Fan
score: 1 about 18 hours ago
score: 1 1 day ago